experiences

This most ancient of lands

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Jack’s Camp, Makgadikgadi Pans

If you’ve ever had the opportunity to travel to northern Botswana and stand in the Kalahari Desert’s Makgadikgadi Pan(s), then you’ll know how difficult it is to imagine that this hot and dry and seemingly endless land was once occupied by a vast inland lake system, and that when that system began to break down, it was for hundreds of thousands of years a rich and gigantic wetland, home to unusually diverse flora and fauna, and so too, it is posited, to some of the earliest modern humans.

Overtaxed imaginations, of course, are somewhat mitigated by our knowledge and experience of neighbouring Okavango Delta, which gives some indication of what this prehistoric wetland might have looked like. And not just by the Delta, for after the rains, as those who have spent time here well know, the desert is briefly and mightily transformed, the pans filling with water, the ‘dead’ trees turning a luminous green, grass growing where once there was only pale soil, the air filled with the trilling of millions of insects, resident desert specialists – brown hyena, meerkat, aardwolf – suddenly joined by flocks of flamingo, large herds of gemsbok, springbok, zebra and wildebeest, and blocks of roaming predators, lion included.

The secrets of our part in this very long-ago past lie in the hands (and DNA) and practices of its indigenous peoples, the Khoisan or Bushmen of the Kalahari. Research using mitochondrial DNA samples taken from living descendants suggest that what is known as the Makgadikgadi-Okavango Wetlands was home to some of the very first modern humans, some of whom would eventually, between 100,000 and 130,000 years ago, migrate southwest and northeast as the climate changed, fanning out, occupying new territories, diversifying genetic stock, and growing in size. While the majority of experts disagree with the claim that this shimmering, apparently empty, and often blindingly white land is the cradle of humankind, there is little doubt that we humans have been here just about as long as we have elsewhere.

To experience this most ancient of lands is to experience a journey not only into the depths of humankind’s past, but also into an extraordinary present, one that is full of surprise and wonder, and leaves us wiser for it.

1. Your very own Okavango

Thanks to its geological fault lines (caused by ancient tectonic activity) and annual seasonal rains from Angola’s highlands, the Okavango Delta, technically a desert, is transformed every year into one of Earth’s largest and most fertile inland wetlands. Its doubling in size the result of an influx of over two trillion gallons of flood water, the Delta’s network of winding channels, palm islands, and lagoons hum with activity, attracting more than 700 species, including the largest population of savanna elephants.

With this all in mind, a visit to the Okavango Delta ought to include at least two ecologically varied ecosystems, which will, in turn, offer the traveller a greater variety of activities. As such, we recommend combining a deep-water area for water-based activities via mokoro or boat with a dry-land area via helicopter and on foot, allowing better access to longer wildlife drives and brilliant walking safaris.

Wildlife experiences aside, it’s perfectly possible to arrange a helicopter to visit the highest concentration of rock art in the world. The Tsodilo Hills, nicknamed the ‘Louvre of the Desert’, are massive quartzite rock formations containing over 4,000 paintings preserved in an area that gives a chronological account of human activities going back at least 100,000 years. Tsodilo is considered a place of worship by the Khoisan, who believe that the people first on Earth landed in these hills, and that it is the only place where one can reach the ‘Great God in the Eastern sky’.

where to stay:

If you’re after the very best private guided experience in the most authentic of bush camps, then you’d be hard-pressed to find anything quite as fine as Beagle Expeditions’s Kweene Trails. Operating in Abu Private Reserve in the western Okavango Delta, Kweene Trails is a private mobile tented experience set up and run by the brilliant Marleen and Simon Byron and their three children — a family who know the Delta intimately.

Spanning two different but wonderfully complementary habitats, Kweene Trails is best accessed via helicopter, and offers a truly wild journey into one of Botswana’s last remaining remote wilderness areas. Guests begin their adventure at Kweene River Camp in the southern part of the Kweene River, a periodic swamp habitat with arid conditions and grass-dominated floodplains, and ends north of the river system at Magwegwe Camp, a seasonal swamp habitat of floodplains, lush islands, and year-round water flow.

2. In search of new beginnings

Unlike East Africa, the Kalahari Basin is not a place of ancient fossils, and until the last two decades or so, its potential for contributing to and enriching our knowledge of early modern human beginnings suffered a perennial research problem, pithily described in a seminal paper (2000) by Sally McBrearty and Alison Brooks: ‘Africa is vast, researchers are few, and research history is short.’

A Eurocentric research bias for what is known as the ‘human revolution’ model (postulating that 40,000 to 50,000 years ago early human behaviours ‘arose suddenly and simultaneously across the Old World’) plus a tendency to focus Africa-based studies in Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania plus coastal southern Africa plus interior territories being generally treated as less promising than their coastal counterparts has until recently meant that northern Botswana’s importance has been at best neglected, at worst ignored.

Fortunately, that has all changed, with archaeological, paleoanthropological, and now the abovementioned genetic studies pointing to early human behaviours emerging tens of thousands earlier in Africa — especially in northern Botswana, in Middle Kalahari — than the human revolution model would suggest. As a result, Botswana has become an important and relatively new area of focus, the ancestral line of the indigenous Khoisan people of the Kalahari being shown to stretch as far back as 200,000 years. Africa is still vast, but researchers are becoming more numerous, and research history is getting longer.

Learning about these new beginnings at the hands of the Khoisan of the Kalahari is an extraordinary opportunity, and one to be handled with enormous care. The Sans people of southern Africa, like hunter-gatherer societies the world over, have suffered the annexing of their lands and the decimation of their customs and traditions. Those that live in modern-day Botswana are no different, and have been similarly exploited by the wrong kind of tourism. Whether it’s a guided walk, visiting the rock art of the Tsolido Hills, or hearing how closely a creation myth matches theories on early human migration patterns, everything is done against this well-understood backdrop.

where to stay:

Bearing the above in mind, spending authentic time with local Khoisan out in the wild is a rare event, and one that we would organise on an exclusive basis, organising and hosting the mobile camp setup, and helping ensure that the journey is exactly what everyone hopes it will and can be: raw, respectful, enlightening. Steeped in the ways and values of a unique and ancient culture, it will be a distinctly immersive and interactive experience, one where the unprecedented knowledge of the plants foraged, the animals tracked, the jewellery and art created, and the pasttimes enjoyed is shared by your host with you. It is a modern day window onto our shared past, one that the vast majority of the world gave up with the advent of agriculture.

3. A place to simply be

Visible from space, the Makgadikgadi Pans border the Kalahari, make up a large section of Makgadikgadi Pans National Park, and are all that remain of a once vast superlake that covered much of central Botswana. At the time, there were considerable wildlife populations, which would all died out or moved on when, a million years ago, a huge geographic fault diverted the flow of the Chobe, Zambezi and Kuando Rivers east and away from the lake. With the Okavango (which now discharges into the Delta) being the only river to flow into the lake, it would eventiually dry up, evolving from a wetland, to a semi arid, to an arid, and eventually and finally a desert habitat, leaving the vast salt pans we see today.

Given its inhospitable conditions for most of the year, Makgadikgadi is best suited to those with the time to look at the land in a very different way. The rewards for doing so – rare wildlife, ancient sites, geological wonders, star gazing, picnics on pan ‘islands’  – are huge. ‘The Makgadikgadi,’ writes Will Jones (field notes), ‘is a place to simply be, to listen to the wind in the grass and the salt cracking beneath your feet on the pans. The quality of the guiding is exceptional and it never ceases to amaze me how much more there is to the bush than first meets the eye – particularly if it is a barren salt pan or a spiky salt-grass savannah! Whilst standing in the middle of the pans, staring at an endless horizon, punctuated by shimmering mirages, the feeling of complete isolation and solitude is overwhelming. It is an old cliché but the silence is deafening and one quickly loses oneself without obvious visual or audible reference points.’

During the months of roughly January through April, a wildebeest and zebra migration can be spotted as they embark on their yearly migrational journey, and from March to June, a sea of greater flamingos can be found on the southern edge of the pans. The Pans are an awesome sight from helicopter, a form of access that gives the traveller a real feel for their vastness, especially when compared against the fertile Delta and northern riverside wildernesses.

where to stay:

Located just outside the eastern boundary of the Makgadikgadi National Park, Jack’s Camp is one of Botswana’s more unusual destinations. Except for a few desert specialist species, little remains in the dry season (April to October) by way of big wildlife – but this is not the point of the camp or the area.

‘As the big wildlife is so sparse during the dry months, and the experience so specialist,’ says Jones, ‘I would strongly recommend leaving Jack’s to last in an itinerary. I feel that it is advisable to first see the big fauna and then move down to the Pans where you can truly appreciate this exceptional landscape without the restless urge to see more wildlife. Jack’s provides you with the opportunity to think and reflect on where you are and what you have done.’ And who, one might add, you are.

For these reasons, the activities are based more on the process of discovery than simply viewing. They include day and night drives, exploring the pans by 4×4 and guided nature walks with Ju/’hoansi trackers, or the experience of four-night quad bike expedition to Kubu Island, an isolated granite outcrop, home to some of the pans’ most beautiful lunar-like prehistoric beaches and covered with a rare collection of Baobab trees.  

If you’d like to discuss more details on the above and how we can include these experiences as part of a bigger Botswana or multi-destination itinerary, get in contact with our exploration team. 

To find out more about travel to Botswana, get in touch with our exploration specialists

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